DA Files: ‘Too Sweet’ Reverend, Old Faces Back in News

Rev. Robert Earl Henderson Jr. (left) was a long-time supporter of Mayor Frank Melton (right). Here he accompanies the then-mayor from his federal trial in 2009 for destroying a duplex in the Virden Addition with sledgehammers. Photo courtesy Kenya Hudson/File photo

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The latest name to resurface in the maelstrom is that of Robert Earl Henderson Jr., 44, who was arrested July 29 for allegedly offering a $500 bribe to one of Smith's assistant district attorneys, Ivon Johnson, in exchange for the dismissal of charges against three criminal defendants on or about June 15, 1016.

"Henderson is charged with one count of bribery of a public official and one count of conspiracy to bribe a public official," an Aug. 1 statement from Attorney General Jim Hood announced. Henderson was booked into the Hinds County jail with bond set at $5,000 for bribery and another $5,000 for conspiracy.

The feds announced charges against Johnson, one of Smith's ADAs, on July 15, saying he "did combine, conspire, confederate and agree together to commit an offense or offenses against the United States" by accepting a bribe, on behalf of the Hinds DA's office, to reduce the bond amount for S.B., a person charged with a felony in the county, from $15,000 to $3,500 in exchange for $500.

Power, Politics, Intrigue

Henderson's personal and criminal history reads like a who's-who of Jackson's power, politics and intrigue. Henderson, who is an ordained Baptist minister, is also known as "Too Sweet," and was a close associate of Melton for years before his death in 2009. Henderson was at Melton's side every day earlier that year at his federal trial in the old James O. Eastland courthouse in downtown Jackson.

Attorney General Jim Hood, along with then-Hinds County District Attorney Faye Peterson—a Melton critic who was appointed in 2001 to the position after long-time DA Ed Peters suddenly resigned after two decades—had previously tried Melton and his bodyguards in state court in Jackson for destroying the duplex, but the men were acquitted. Robert Shuler Smith, then a defense attorney based in the Washington Addition, defended Marcus Wright, one of Melton's bodyguards, in the trial. He later defeated Peterson after a campaign supported by both Peters and Melton. Turner worked for Smith's campaign; Smith told the Jackson Free Press then that he had known Turner for years.

Like many of Melton's mentees, Henderson was a welcome visitor in Melton's home, sometimes bringing young people there to talk to the mayor, as he did April 2, 2006, on the eve of the trial of Albert "Batman" Donelson and associates in Hinds County court for allegedly killing rival Aaron Crockett on May 10, 2001.

During the Donelson trial, attorney Robert Shuler Smith was defending James Benton, another of the so-called Wood Street Players that Donelson allegedly ran. Smith was present at Melton's home the same night and joined the odd mix of guests for a stuffed-chicken dinner—prepared by Melton and then-Police Chief Shirlene Anderson, who also washed dishes afterward—at the table with the JFP team, the bodyguards and young men who stayed in the home, some of them felons.

Rev. Henderson, as Melton introduced him, came into his home with a young man who had recently gotten out of prison, with Melton then lecturing him about staying out of trouble, but they didn't stay long.

Henderson reached out to the JFP to speak on Melton's behalf in the lead-up to his state trial. And he would later write, in a Dec. 28, 2011, handwritten letter requesting clemency from Gov. Haley Barbour for his own crimes, that Melton had made a difference in his life. "I was granted the opportunity to work with the late former Mayor Frank E. Melton by helping organize and hire under-privileged, high-risk youth," Henderson wrote to the governor.

"Uh-huh," Peters replied, as reported in Curtis Wilkie's book, "The Fall of the House of Zeus" about the Dickie Scruggs scandal. "In fact, there's a lawyer—the D.A., or the D.A.-to-be. He's got a couple of them he's fixing to do the same thing to—that tried to screw him out of a percentage of fees and things." Wilkie assumed he meant Smith; he had already defeated Peterson in the Democratic primary and was assured of winning the general election in November.

Smith has long denied any wrongdoing on behalf of Peters or others. Peters would later get immunity for admitting that he offered his former assistant district attorney-turned-Judge Delaughter a bribe; the judge went to prison for the felony.

His powerful network may have paid off for Henderson. The names of some of those people would help him clear his record in 2011. "During this time, I established relationships within the community, local law enforcement, city council, state representatives and court municipalities in an effort to improve our neighborhood and our great city of Jackson," Henderson wrote in the handwritten letter to Barbour.

Putting Away Childish Things

Henderson, who attended Jim Hill High School until the 11th grade, had numerous brushes with the law, his clemency request shows, as do many young Jackson men who are then plagued by criminal records for youthful transgressions. Born April 23, 1972, Henderson came of age into the crack era of the late 1980s and early 1990s. His first conviction was on Sept. 6, 1991, for receiving stolen property, with two more of the same convictions coming on May 26, 1992, and another on Dec. 5, 1997. He was convicted of cocaine possession on May 26, 1992 and Nov. 21, 1997.

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Old Jackson police records show Henderson was arrested for disorderly conduct, auto theft and conspiracy to distribute cocaine, all in the early 1990s. His name also surfaced in other witness statements and police reports, with one witness to an alleged violent crime calling him Melton's "push-along boy" in a deposition, but Henderson was not legally implicated in those instances. That witness later recanted his statement.

Having served his time, Henderson applied for a pardon on Dec. 28, 2011, from the Mississippi Parole Board. Two of the five parole-board members, Shannon Warnock and Clarence Brown, voted to pardon him, but the other three did not. Then, twelve days later, Henderson asked outgoing Gov. Barbour for clemency.

In a second handwritten letter, also dated Dec. 28, 2011, Henderson quoted 1 Corinthians 13:30: "When I was a child, I spoke as a child, but when I became a man, I put away childish things."

Henderson also drew on his powerful network to support his clemency. Long-time state Sen. Alice Harden wrote Barbour on Mississippi Senate letterhead. "I have known Robert for many years and believe that he is honest, responsible and forthright in his dealings with his family, friends and colleagues," she wrote. "He has demonstrated a high degree of loyalty and trustworthiness to the causes which be believes."

The reverend listed his employer in 2011 as Garrett Enterprises, where he said he worked as a supervisor. His character references were Tyrone Lewis, a long-time Jackson Police Department officer who would soon become Hinds County sheriff and was defeated for re-election earlier this year by Victor Mason (who also helped Melton work with young people, including at a camp in Texas in the 1980s). Henderson had helped organize a fundraiser for Lewis' first run for sheriff at Melton's home in 2007; his name was a contact on the invitation. Then-Sheriff Malcolm McMillin kept his seat then, but Lewis defeated him four years later.

Henderson's other references for clemency included District Attorney Robert Shuler Smith. Henderson listed his defense attorneys as George Holmes, Sam Wilkerson and Sanford Knott, the latter of whom figures prominently in Smith's current battle with the attorney general on behalf of Turner and Butler, whom Knott represents.

Barbour granted clemency to Henderson for his previous convictions, along with a long list of other pardoned criminals, some of whom were brutal murderers and rapists that make Henderson's convictions pale by comparison.

Barbour granted Henderson a "full, complete and unconditional pardon"; the reverend is listed as the last one on the former governor's list of pardons.